Bring your beats to Def Jam 3

Thursday 12 October 2006
A feature planned for Xbox 360's next-gen outing of Def Jam, EA's hip-hop flavoured fighting game, will enable you to import your own songs into the action, see how they affect the beat-driven fighters a🌊nd their moves, and even set up clashes between your chosen track and a friend's preferred rhythm.

"Let's say you like speed metal 𒊎and I like Sade," says lead designer Kudo Tsu🔯noda, "so we both put in our songs and we fight and I can prove to you that Sade is better than speed metal," Tsunoda revealed to MTV.com.

As we found out in 澳洲🌼幸运5开奖号码历史查询:our last eyes-on ♛with Def Jam next-gen, th🍃is episode of hip-hop battling emphasises the link between sound and action, so arenas reverberate to the rhythm of the music, each fighter'sꦦ moves are tuned to work best against a certain type of track and hazards around you are triggered by the ever-pumping beat. "That's the main thing of the game - knowing the beat's coming and pow!" Tsunoda says.

Plans for next-gen Def Jam will see a move a💯way from the gritty, underground feel of previous titles, with Tsunoda commenting that TI - one of the rap star characters in Def Jam - is "not hanging out in these underground fighting cl🀅ubs".

Other features will also include the ability to build your own hip-hop empire, releasing music video♛s cut w💛ith scenes from your fights and signing up other artists to your label.

Tsunoda is aiming to shake up the world of beat-'em-ups with Def Jam's fresh, intriguing beat-based focus: "There haven't been any real𒅌 innovations in the fighting-game genre in the longest time. It's all the same."

Next-gen Def Jam won't burst on to the scene until well into next year but expect to be move💧d by its ambitions when it finally takes centre stage.

Ben Richardson is a former Staff Writer for Official PlayStation 2 𒁏magazine and a former Content Editor of GamesRadar+. In the years since Ben left GR, he has worked as a columnist, communications officer, charity coach, and podcast host – but we still look back to his news stories from time to time, they are a window into a different era of video games.